Dave:
I'm really grooving on your uni-tank plumbing approach shown above. Very nice workmanship as well. The photo shows the tank's forward end with two exit holes. It looks like either you've soldered the tubes in with very short extensions or you've installed some kind of shoulders in the holes. Would you kindly elaborate?
Thanks.
Dave Mo...
Hey Dave....thanks a lot!
In the pix I posted, the holes are punched from the inside of the end cap.
The way I do it is....
Locate the holes on the tank end cap or for the overflow....
Then drill a small hole in each location....never use a awl...that's one of the things that's wrong with mfgd tanks....they leak here when the solder has to close up a huge hole.
Then....using a piece of hardwood...I use a chunk of maple...drill a slightly larger hole than 1/8" in the maple.
Drill a #26 hole in the maple for the 1/8" sharpened music wire punch.
I use a 2" piece of 1/8" music wire sharpened in a drill press....
Then position the work over the hole in the wood and using a hammer, punch the hole from the inside of the tank piece.
This will give you a nice, tight flange that won't leak....this is the extension shown in the pix.
Of course, chuck up some 1/8" copper tubing and spin it clean with perhaps 400 grit or whatever.
Then bend the tubes to shape and do a final clean with contact cleaner, or lacquer/dope thinner.
I use liquid flux to tin the copper tubes as shown then wipe clean with a paper towel while still molten.
Then clip together, apply more liquid flux and use a 100w stick iron.
It goes real quick with high heat and does not heat up the whole tank when soldering the seams.
When done...use lacquer thinner right away to clean and flush the tank to get the flux out before it gets hard.